A dramatic shakeup in Canada’s Express Entry (EE) immigration system has sent shockwaves through thousands of applicants, as many who were once top-ranked candidates suddenly lost their competitive edge. Simultaneously, the province of Manitoba has rolled out an emergency open work permit program to shield certain Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) applicants from losing their legal status.
Together, these developments signal a fundamental reshuffling of Canada’s immigration landscape.
Federal Shakeup: Over 8,000 Candidates Demoted Overnight
As of March 25, 2025, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) implemented a significant policy change: the removal of Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) bonus points for those with a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA), a move that immediately disrupted the EE pool.
Applicants who had previously received a 50- or 200-point boost through LMIA sponsorship saw their CRS scores plummet—many falling out of the high-score range critical to securing an Invitation to Apply (ITA) for permanent residency.
According to official data, the changes resulted in:
A reduction of 5,740 candidates in the 501–600 score range;
1,618 fewer in the 491–500 range;
And 984 fewer in the 481–490 range.
In total, 8,342 high-ranking candidates were effectively “downgraded” to lower tiers, losing their priority advantage in the selection process.
“This is one of the most extensive internal redistributions we’ve seen,” one immigration consultant told us privately. “People spent years building a competitive profile, only to have it unravel overnight.”
Though the overall EE candidate pool grew by 7,373 individuals over the same period, analysts say this increase primarily reflects a reshuffling, not an influx of new hopefuls.
Manitoba’s Emergency Work Permits: A Lifeline for PNP Hopefuls
In response to growing status uncertainty, the Manitoba government announced a temporary open work permit initiative targeting certain MPNP (Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program) candidates. The policy is designed to help those whose existing permits are expiring—but who have not yet reached the federal PR stage—remain legally employed.
Applicants are eligible if they meet all of the following criteria:
Their current work permit will expire within 45 days, or already expired in 2024 or 2025;
They have continuously resided in Manitoba since before January 15, 2025;
They held a valid Expression of Interest (EOI) in the MPNP system as of January 15, 2025, and it remains active;
They can provide a letter of employment from a Manitoba employer;
And they meet IRCC’s general criteria for work permit applications.
Starting April 22, 2025, eligible candidates can apply online for a “support letter” from the province, which can then be submitted to IRCC as part of an open work permit application. The program ends December 31, 2025.
However, those who have already received a formal Letter of Advice to Apply (LAA) under the MPNP are not eligible.
“This is our way of closing a gap that’s left too many people in limbo,” said one provincial immigration official. “We need these workers, and they deserve a chance to stay while their PR files are being processed.”
The Legal Status Crisis: Falling Through the Cracks
While federal authorities claim the removal of LMIA bonuses is meant to shift focus toward applicants’ own education, language, and work experience, the abruptness of the change has exposed a systemic vulnerability: many applicants now find themselves without a valid work permit, without PR status, and without options.
For example, those with expired post-graduation work permits (PGWPs), or who are no longer eligible for new LMIAs due to low-wage job restrictions, now face the possibility of forced departure.
“I had a 490+ score thanks to LMIA,” said one Chinese applicant who declined to be named. “Now I’m in the 430s. My permit expires in July. I don’t know what to do.”
Employers are also facing fallout. In regions where labour shortages remain acute, losing a vetted and experienced worker due to red tape is both disruptive and demoralizing.
Policy Overhaul or Crisis of Trust?
For IRCC, the aim may be to refine the EE system to better align with long-term labour goals. But critics argue the suddenness and lack of transitional safeguards are eroding trust in Canada’s immigration process.
Sandra Blair, a veteran policy analyst, warns that this is “not a tweak—it’s a redefinition of value in the selection process. The problem is, real people are paying the price.”
She adds: “There should have been a grace period. This is like mid-flight course correction without notifying the passengers. People are crashing.”
Conclusion: In Search of Certainty Amid a Shifting System
While Manitoba steps in to offer temporary relief, and IRCC defends its structural overhaul, applicants caught in the middle are left with more questions than answers.
To them, immigration is not just a score or a category—it’s a life plan. A job. A home. A future. And when that path becomes opaque, the credibility of the system itself is at stake.
From Orange Juice to Canned Tomatoes: 6,900 Canadian Grocery Stores Quietly Raise Prices as Trade War Costs Hit the Shelves
A quiet “storm at the dinner table” is sweeping across Canada, reshaping the way people shop. From orange juice to canned tomatoes, price tags are shifting—and behind these changes lies more than just inflation. It’s the ripple effect of an international trade war, with hidden tariff costs creeping down the supply chain and landing in Canadians’ grocery carts.
According to the Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers (CFIG), nearly all of the country’s approximately 6,900 independent grocery stores have begun raising prices to varying degrees—especially on fresh foods. Gary Sands, Senior Vice President at CFIG, said these small businesses already operate on razor-thin margins—about 2%—leaving little room to absorb rising costs.
“This isn’t a choice for retailers, it’s a matter of survival,” Sands said. “When food manufacturers raise prices by 4%, 5%, 6%, or even double digits, we simply have no choice but to pass those costs on to consumers.”
The Hidden Tariff in a Glass of Orange Juice
Orange juice, a staple in many Canadian homes, offers a striking example of how tariffs are playing out in real time. On Loblaws’ website, price differences between local and imported products are stark:
Canadian-made President’s Choice pulp-free orange juice: $5.00 (32¢ per 100ml)
U.S.-made Tropicana (marked “tariff-affected”): $8.72 (66¢ per 100ml)
Canadian Simply Orange: $7.69 (50¢ per 100ml)
At Metro, the trend is similar:
Canadian Irresistibles orange juice (2.5L): $6.99 (28¢ per 100ml)
U.S. Tropicana (2.5L): $13.99 (53¢ per 100ml)
This isn’t just about brand preference—it’s a direct consequence of tariffs levied on U.S. imports. Stuart Smyth, professor of agricultural and resource economics at the University of Saskatchewan, explains that policy volatility since February has caused pricing uncertainty, prompting producers to factor in worst-case tariff scenarios ahead of time.
Canadian-Made Doesn’t Mean Cost-Free
Surprisingly, domestic food manufacturers aren’t spared either. Michael Graydon, CEO of the Food, Health & Consumer Products of Canada (FHCP), revealed that many Canadian producers still rely on U.S. ingredients. One Ontario cannery, for instance, sources tomatoes from California—now subject to retaliatory tariffs since March.
“Coffee, chocolate, nuts—all key ingredients in Canadian food production—are also on the tariff list,” Graydon said. “Most producers are still trying to absorb these costs themselves, hoping things stabilize soon. But no one knows how long they can hold out.”
Price increases are not always immediate. When suppliers want to raise prices, they must file formal requests with retailers, justifying the need. The process can take 6 to 12 weeks, meaning the full impact of cost increases hasn’t yet appeared on store shelves.
Canada’s Cheapest Grocery Chains Revealed
Faced with rising prices, consumers are adapting. A recent Narcity poll on Facebook asked Canadians to name their go-to budget grocery chains. Surprisingly, bulk-buying giant Costco didn’t make the top three. Instead, Canadians chose:
No Frills
Food Basics
Giant Tiger
Giant Tiger, in particular, is being hailed as a rising star. “It keeps getting better,” one user commented. Others said Costco is great for large families, but not always ideal for singles or small households—where bulk buying can backfire financially.
Other honorable mentions include FreshCo, Walmart, and Dollarama. “Aside from meat, dairy, and produce, you can buy almost everything at Dollarama,” said one Ontario shopper.
Additional budget-friendly stores, though less frequently mentioned, include Real Canadian Superstore, T&T Supermarket, Farm Boy, and Save On Foods. Loblaws also drew praise for offering aggressive discounts from time to time.
The consensus? No one store is cheapest across the board. Smart shopping means hopping between chains and keeping an eye on promotions.
A New Era of “Shelf Sovereignty”
Beyond price tags, there’s a deeper consumer shift underway. Sands says more and more Canadians are actively seeking out “Made in Canada” products. Retailers who previously stocked heavy inventories of U.S. goods are now struggling—unable to sell at profitable prices.
“Consumers are speaking with their feet,” Sands noted. “I’ve been in this industry for 25 years, and I’ve never seen this level of demand for Canadian-made goods.”
There is one bright spot: with warmer weather arriving, locally grown Canadian fruits and vegetables are entering peak season. These products avoid both tariffs and long supply chains, offering relief to shoppers looking for fresh, affordable options.
“No one likes higher prices, but we have to shop smarter,” said one Toronto resident. In a trade war with no clear end in sight, the grocery aisle has become the front line—and Canadians are learning to navigate it with both caution and creativity.
Montreal Debate Signals Stark Fiscal Divide as Trudeau Liberals and Poilievre’s Conservatives Face Off Over Who Truly Helps the Middle Class
In a televised French-language debate in Montreal on April 16, the leaders of Canada’s four main federal parties clashed in what may become the defining showdown of the upcoming election cycle—not over foreign policy, but over something far closer to home: your wallet.
With the country buffeted by inflation, housing shortages, and the economic tremors of an escalating trade war with the U.S., the debate quickly zeroed in on tax reform and housing policy. Both the ruling Liberals and the opposition Conservatives promised relief, but their definitions of “fairness” and “fiscal responsibility” couldn’t be further apart.
At the heart of the divide: should Canada chase long-term economic equity through government-led initiatives, or immediate tax relief to empower consumers and businesses?
A Rare Consensus: Taxes Are Too High
While Canadians may be politically divided, they are remarkably united in one sentiment—taxes are burdensome. Across the political spectrum, voters are voicing frustrations over complex tax codes and the perceived inefficiency of government spending.
But the consensus ends there. When it comes to how to cut taxes—and who should benefit most—the fault lines reappear.
Liberal Party front-runner Mark Carney, a former Bank of Canada governor, has proposed what he calls a “Middle Class Tax Cut.” His plan would lower the lowest federal income tax rate from 15% to 14%, benefitting over 22 million Canadians. For a dual-income household, the savings would average $825 per year. His pitch? Targeted tax relief tied to household needs—food, housing, transportation—without jeopardizing Canada’s fiscal health.
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre counters with a bolder offer: slashing the bottom tax rate to 12.75% within two years. His team estimates average annual savings of $900 for workers, and up to $1,800 for families. He also wants to raise the tax-free income threshold for seniors to $34,000—$10,000 higher than current levels.
But economists warn that without matching spending cuts or new revenue streams, both tax plans risk swelling the federal deficit. “It’s a question of sustainability,” said Dr. Elise Fontaine, a fiscal policy researcher at McGill University. “These are politically appealing proposals, but the math needs to add up.”
The Carbon Tax Divide: Symbol or Substance?
Another flashpoint was Canada’s contentious carbon pricing system. Carney, aligning with his environmentalist roots, vowed to maintain industrial carbon pricing but remove consumer-level carbon taxes. Instead, his Liberals would expand green incentives: rebates for home retrofits, electric vehicle purchases, and public transit investments.
The Conservative approach is radically different: eliminate the entire carbon tax system, industrial emissions charges included. Poilievre argues that the system punishes ordinary Canadians with higher heating and fuel costs, estimating average annual savings of $500 to $700 per household if repealed.
“It’s not just about climate,” Poilievre said. “It’s about affordability. Working people can’t wait for trickle-down environmentalism.”
Homegrown Solutions, or Housing for All?
Housing affordability has become Canada’s political lightning rod—and for good reason. With average home prices far outpacing wage growth, young Canadians increasingly feel locked out of ownership, and renters face soaring costs.
The Liberals are betting on state intervention. Their plan includes:
A federal-led push to build affordable housing on public land.
Over $25 billion in support for modular housing innovation.
GST exemptions for new homes under $1 million for first-time buyers (estimated savings up to $40,000).
Halving municipal development fees for multi-unit housing.
By contrast, the Conservatives believe market stimulation will unlock supply faster. Their proposals:
Raise the GST exemption ceiling to $1.3 million—and extend it to all buyers.
Push municipalities to lower construction-related taxes, potentially saving up to $100,000 on a new urban home.
Cancel GST on made-in-Canada vehicles to support domestic industry and consumer savings.
“The Liberal plan is paternalistic and slow,” a Conservative campaign adviser told BBC. “Our strategy is to unleash the private sector.”
But Who Pays for It All?
As attractive as these policies sound, experts caution that both parties are making billion-dollar promises without clear offsets. For instance, the GST rebate expansion and public housing initiatives proposed by the Liberals could significantly dent federal revenues. Similarly, the Conservative tax cuts and industrial deregulation may deepen budget shortfalls unless paired with program cuts—none of which were detailed in the debate.
“Political arithmetic often omits economic consequences,” said Fontaine. “And when interest rates are high, deficits are not just abstract numbers—they’re future taxes.”
The Takeaway: Two Visions of Canada
As the election looms, the debate in Montreal revealed not just two parties, but two visions for Canada’s economic future.
Carney’s Liberals envision a Canada where government acts as builder, redistributor, and steward of long-term resilience. Poilievre’s Conservatives envision a leaner state, with empowered citizens driving growth through free enterprise and personal savings.
Both visions have their merits—and their risks.
For voters, the question isn’t simply “who will cut my taxes?” but “who will make my life more affordable in the long run?”
In a country where the grocery bill and the rent check have become political barometers, that answer may decide the next government.
QUEBEC BORDER — A woman and two young children have gone missing in the dense woods straddling the Canada–U.S. border, triggering a full-scale search-and-rescue operation by Quebec provincial police and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
They were last seen near Godmanchester, a rural town 65 kilometers southwest of Montreal, attempting to cross illegally into Canada.
Three others — two men and one woman — were apprehended late Wednesday night in the same area. According to RCMP spokesperson Sgt. Martina Pilarova, the detained individuals told officers their companions became separated in the forest during the crossing.
The group was fleeing the United States. All of them are transgender or non-binary.
A Flight for Identity
Their stories reflect a surge in border activity unseen since the early Trump era.
Since President Donald Trump’s return to the White House, the administration has dismantled protections for gender-diverse Americans, revoking the “X” gender option on federal IDs, restricting trans participation in the military and sports, and rescinding diversity and inclusion mandates across agencies.
That rollback has had real consequences.
“We never thought we’d have to leave the country,” said Salem Took, a trans resident of Maine. “But I don’t feel safe anymore. Not legally. Not physically. Not emotionally.”
Took and their partner are now considering selling their home, uprooting their children, and moving to New Brunswick.
They’re not alone.
The New Exodus: Americans at the Gates
According to the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), 557 asylum seekers — a record number — entered Quebec between April 1 and 6. That’s nearly equal to the entire total for January.
While many came from crisis-hit nations like Haiti and Venezuela, a striking number were American citizens, primarily LGBTQ+ individuals citing persecution under new U.S. federal policy.
In February and March alone, CBSA processed 755 and 1,356 asylum applications respectively at the Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle crossing — a nearly 300% year-on-year increase.
And the number is still climbing.
“We are experiencing an unprecedented surge,” said a CBSA spokesperson in a statement Thursday. “Our contingency plans include temporary intake centers, staff redeployment, and coordination with provincial health services.”
Processing centers are now operating near border towns and in emergency shelters. Mobile courtrooms are being prepared.
Can a Canadian Visa Offer Safety from a Superpower?
Under current law, U.S. citizens may apply for asylum in Canada if they remain inside the country for 14 days. Immigration lawyers say they’re seeing a flood of consultations from American clients — especially transgender people — asking if political conditions back home could qualify as grounds for protection.
“There’s a real case to be made,” said immigration attorney Yamina Ansari. “If individuals can demonstrate that their identity puts them at risk of systemic harm, even in a country like the U.S., then Canadian asylum law has room for them.”
Calls are growing for fast-track exceptions for U.S.-based LGBTQ+ claimants.
But the legal process is complex, and Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) is already overwhelmed. Delays are stretching from months to years.
“Join Canada, Eh?”: When Satire Mirrors Reality
The growing migration wave has sparked both concern and mockery online. A parody website titled “Join Canada, Eh?” has gone viral, allowing Americans to “vote” which U.S. state should join Canada as its “11th province.”
Over one million people have cast votes. Leading the pack? Michigan, followed by Oregon, Vermont, and Maine.
“It’s satire,” said creator Corey Ross of Starvox Entertainment, “but it’s also how people process despair — with humor.”
Border Towns Overwhelmed — and Divided
In real terms, the influx is stretching the seams of Canadian border towns.
In Saint Andrews, New Brunswick, town officials report a sharp rise in asylum inquiries — particularly from American families. Locals are supportive, but anxious.
“We want to help,” said town councilor Linda M., “but we’re at capacity. We’re talking about housing, clinics, schools. Everything’s tight.”
Social media backlash has been swift. Hashtags like #CanadaIsFull and #SecureTheBorder are trending. Some users are demanding tighter controls.
“We can’t fix America’s problems,” wrote one Twitter user. “We can barely afford groceries ourselves.”
What’s Next?
With tensions rising and the border heating up, Canadian federal authorities have yet to announce a definitive stance on how to handle the growing number of U.S. claimants — especially those with no criminal history but complex identity-based claims.
Meanwhile, the missing woman and her two children remain unaccounted for as of Friday morning. Search crews are expanding their perimeter.
This is no longer a fringe issue. It’s a continental crisis unfolding in real time.
And for thousands of Americans, Canada is no longer just a neighbor — it’s an escape plan.